Canada is often held up as a global leader alongside Australia and the United States when it comes to establishing
MPAs, and many Canadians believe that we are among the best when it
comes to protecting our national ocean treasures and resources.
Unfortunately, this is not the case, and Canada is failing when it
comes to establishing federal MPAs.
A recent report card produced by Living Oceans Society shows that
Canada has a dismal record compared to Australia and the United States
when it comes to the amount of ocean area protected and investing
financial resources to establish federal MPAs. All three countries
were evaluated in four subjects, and Canada only received a passing
grade in one of them! Australia and the US, whose total areas of
federally designated MPAs
are 32 and 16 times larger than Canada’s, received passing
grades.

Download MPA Repord Card 1.5 MB (PDF)
To view the report card properly in Adobe reader:
- Open the report card in Adobe
- Under 'View' --> 'Page Display' make sure that 'Two-Up' and 'Show Cover Page During To-Up' are selected.
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Report Card Summary
- Canada received an overall F grade by failing mathematics, economics, and geography. It received a grade of C in law.
- Australia and the US’ total area of federally designated MPAs is 32 and 16 times larger than Canada’s, respectively.
- Less
than .5% of Canada’s ocean area is protected by the federal government
within an MPA. This is substantially less than Australia (10%) and the
US (5%).
- Canada has the laws, policies and regulations in
place to establish MPAs but they lack measurable objectives, targets,
timelines and mechanisms for measuring success.
- Canada’s
annual federal spending on MPAs ($11.35 million) pales in comparison to
Australia ($33 million), and especially to the United States ($274
million).
- Canada does not have a national eco-regional
classification system in place for all types of federal MPAs making it
impossible to assess the degree to which each habitat type is protected.
To improve its grades, the Government of Canada must:
- Immediately resource and launch comprehensive marine
planning processes designed to establish networks of MPAs as well as
ecosystem-based management in the Large Ocean Management Areas (LOMAs)
identified in Canada’s Oceans Strategy. These are the Pacific North
Coast Integrated Management Area (PNCIMA), Eastern Scotian Shelf
(ESSIM), Beaufort Sea, Placentia Bay, and Gulf of St. Lawrence (GOSLIM).
- Set clear and measurable timelines and targets for MPA establishment and adhere to them.
- Provide adequate human and financial resources to the departments and programs responsible for establishing a network of MPAs.
- Create
a national classification system to identify each eco-region that needs
protection, track the extent of eco-regions that are currently
protected and evaluate priority areas for protection within these
regions.
- Develop the necessary governance agreements with
First Nations, Inuit, Provincial, and territorial governments in order
to move forward with marine planning and MPA designation.
- Improve access to information and transparency of existing information regarding the status and extent of Canada’s MPAs.
Living Oceans Society is calling on the government to immediately
launch comprehensive and well resourced marine planning processes
designed to establish networks of MPAs throughout Canada’s oceans.
These processes should include clear and measurable timelines and
targets for MPA establishment.
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